Med seats in TN may not increase, tough competition expected
Pushpa.Narayan@timesofindia.com 18.04.2025
Chennai : The increase of 50 undergraduate medical seats each in govt medical colleges at Namakkal, Tirupur, and Virudhunagar has not happened yet this y ear because Tamil Nadu did n ot apply for it. Revised list of undergraduate medical colleges and seats for 2025 released by National Medical Commission shows no increase in MBBS seats for Tamil Nadu. This is expected to make admissions to undergraduate medical courses tougher this year, experts say. Directorate of Medical Education officials said the deadline for submitting applications for an increase in seats or starting new colleges expired before the state decided to seek an increase in seats.
“We a sked for a short window to apply after the deadline, but could not,” said a senior health department official. However, on Wednesday, the state govt received a letter from the Centre asking if it wants to apply for an increase in seats or new medical colleges for 2025-26 a dmissions. “We have infrastructure to increase seats in all three medical colle ges. The state will decide if it wants to increase seats in other districts too,” the official said.
The state now has 77 medical colleges — govt and private —offering 12,050 seats. While 32 of the 38 districts have at least one govt medical college, minister Ma Subramanian said the state’s policy is to have at least one medical college in every district. “This will not just increase seats but also ensure advanced medical care is accessible to the p oor,” he said.
Meanwhile, various doctors’ bodies, including the Tamil Nadu Govt Doctors’Association, have urged the govt not to increase UG seats. Tamil Nadu has more than 1.8 lakh doctors registered in the medical council, and among them, 1.5 lakh are still practising. The state has one doctor for 600 people against the recommendation of one per 1,000, the association said.
“In next 10 years, TN will have one doctor for every 350 people because every year 10,000 MBBS graduates and 1,500 foreign medical graduates apply for a medical licence. There is also a reduction in population,” said TNDGA president Dr K Senthil. “What we need is an increase in PG and superspeciality seats.”





